 Unicode CLDR 48 is now available and has been integrated into version 78 of ICU.
Unicode CLDR 48 is now available and has been integrated into version 78 of ICU. 
  Some of the most significant changes in this release are the following (for more detail, see the CLDR 48 release note page):
- Updated for Unicode 17, including new names and search terms for new emoji, new sort order, and Han→Latin romanization additions for many characters. 
- Updated to the latest external standards and data sources, such as the language subtag registry, UN M49 macro regions, ISO 4217 currencies, etc. 
- Many additions to language data including: 
- Likely Subtags, for deriving the likely script and region from the language (used in many processes) 
- New formatting options: 
- Rational number formats added, allowing for formats like “5½” in tech preview 
- For timezones, usesMetazone adds two new attributes stdOffset and dstOffset so that implementations can use either “main” or “rearguard” TZDB data 
- Combination formats added for relative dates + times, such as “tomorrow at 12:30” 
- Additional units added for scientific contexts (coulombs, farads, teslas, etc.) and for English systems (fortnights, imperial pints, etc.) 
- Many corrections and updates for Metazone data and calendars eras (including removal of eras and fixes to start dates) 
- This is the first release where the new CLDR Organization process is in place for DDL languages. As a result, several locales were able to reach higher levels (see below). 
See the CLDR 48 release note page for information on accessing the data, reviewing charts of the changes, and — importantly — Migration issues.
CLDR provides key building blocks for software to support the world's languages (dates, times, numbers, sort-order, etc.). All major browsers and modern mobile phones use CLDR for language support. (See Who uses CLDR?)
Via the Survey Tool, contributors supply data for their languages — data that is widely used to support much of the world’s software. This data is also a factor in determining which languages are supported on mobile phones and computer operating systems.
Locale Coverage Levels
Changes in coverage
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